Pints With Aquinas - What the 1960's Did to the Catholic Church & Why the Tide Is Finally Turning (Fr. Perricone) | Ep. 574
Episode Date: April 13, 2026Fr. John A. Perricone entered seminary in 1968 and watched from the inside as the Catholic Church underwent its most catastrophic crisis in modern history: heresy taught openly in classrooms, thousand...s of priests abandoning the faith, and a generation of bishops who did nothing to stop it. Today, he sees the tide turning with many returning to these previously discarded traditions of the Catholic Church. Ep. 574 Theotokos Rosaries are available here: https://store.dailywire.com/collections/matt-fradd-pints-with-aquinas/products/rosary - - - 📚Resources Mentioned: • https://www.fatherperricone.com • "Torches Against the Abyss" by Fr. John Perricone https://a.co/d/00rLiBrh • "Introduction to the Devout Life" by St. Francis de Sales https://a.co/d/0eBMxtaq • "Self-Knowledge and Self-Discipline" by Fr. Basil Maturin https://a.co/d/07e3QrBw • "Spiritual Guidelines for Souls Seeking God" by Fr. Basil Maturin https://a.co/d/01qpmZnS • "Abandonment to Divine Providence" by Fr. Jean-Pierre de Caussade https://a.co/d/07tPvS5O • "The Screwtape Letters" by C.S. Lewis https://a.co/d/04RDlk1q • "The Priesthood and Perfection" by Fr. Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange https://a.co/d/05D2wl0Z • "The Priest in Union with Christ" by Fr. Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange https://a.co/d/0cYBUa4Y • "Divine Intimacy" by Fr. Gabriel of St. Mary Magdalen https://a.co/d/0cpoRMSU • "Confessions" by St. Augustine https://a.co/d/06ec2Yu1 - - - Today’s Sponsors: Shopify: Sign up for your $1-per-month trial and start selling today at https://Shopify.com/pints PreBorn: Make a difference for generations to come. Donate securely online at https://preborn.com/PINTS or dial #250 keyword 'BABY' Charity Mobile: Visit https://charitymobile.com/MATTFRADD to get started. Free Phone offer with code MATTFRADD Good Ranchers: Get $25 off your first order and FREE meat for life when you use code PINTS at https://GoodRanchers.com Cluny - Visit https://clunypress.com today and save 15% with code PINTS15 - - - Become a Daily Wire Member and watch all of our content ad-free: https://www.dailywire.com/subscribe 📲 Download the free Daily Wire app today on iPhone, Android, Roku, Apple TV, Samsung, and more. - - - 📕 Get my newest book, Jesus Our Refuge, here: https://a.co/d/bDU0xLb 🍺 Want to Support Pints With Aquinas? 🍺 Get episodes a week early and join exclusive live streams with me! Become an annual supporter at 👉 https://mattfradd.locals.com/support - - - 💻 Follow Me on Social Media: 📌 Facebook: https://facebook.com/mattfradd 📸 Instagram: https://instagram.com/mattfradd 𝕏 Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/Pints_W_Aquinas 🎵 TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@pintswithaquinas 📚 PWA Merch – https://dwplus.shop/MattFraddMerch 👕 Grab your favorite PWA gear here: https://shop.pintswithaquinas.com - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I don't mean to start off this interview on a Debbie Downer note.
You're joining the seminary and becoming ordained while thousands of men are leaving the priesthood.
What was it like?
Oh, I could spend forever on that.
Let's do it.
It was an alarming period.
Could you give me an example of a heresy taught in a classroom?
Oh, my God.
Well, Jesus Christ is not God.
No.
The seminary faculty decided that they had to begin weeding out any candidates who were showing any kind of
partiality to the Roman Catholic Church as it existed before 1970. So they adopted the
communist method in the Soviet Union and two days before ordination I was called into
the director's office and told I wasn't going to be ordained. Two days. Whoa. You had
breakfast with Mother Teresa? I could remember once. I said Mother you've been in
the worst sectors of the world imaginable. Tell me of all the things you've seen,
What is the worst evil you've come across?
She looked at me without missing a beat, Matt.
She said, wow.
So, Father Perricone, you joined seminary in 1970.
Is that correct?
That's correct.
Actually, that would have been major seminary, Matt.
I entered in 1968 in what in those days was called the Divinity School.
That would be men who would have gone to college but knew they had a vocation with the priest.
So they were settled into this two-year program where they would do accelerated Latin and Greek.
And then after that two-year period, 70, they would go to the major seminary for six years of philosophy and theology.
Yes, so 68 I started, actually.
So here's the question, because I mean, I was born in 83, not that anybody asked me, but there you are.
But you're joining the seminary and becoming ordained while thousands of men are.
leaving the priesthood. I don't mean to start off this interview on a Debbie Downer note,
but what was it like going through Semini during that turbulent time?
Oh, I could spend forever on that. Let's do it. In 1968, the church was just beginning
her meltdown. You might remember that this was the year that Father Charles Curran
mounted his assent against the newly published and cyclical Omadeghurne by Paul the Six. He rallied
all the theology professors at Catholic University of America and throughout this country,
which represented the first major rupture with Rome in this country.
It was an alarming period.
And I remember that summer so well.
I remember when the encyclical was promulgated on the Feast of St. Anne July 26th.
And that was really my first delving into the study of moral theology because I had to determine how would it be that I could defend this encyclical to people who are coming.
Already before then, there was deterioration splitting happening at the seams by bishops doing nothing to terrible, terrible abuses on every level happening in their dioceses.
And so I entered under that cloud.
And I remember so well that my class, which consisted of 53 candidates.
Wow.
So there was not the full erosion having taken place yet.
And clearly there was a split between those seminarians, 25 or so,
who wondered to adhere strictly to the Catholic faith.
especially the Catholic liturgy,
particularly the Latin Mass,
which had just been stopped,
or was about to be stopped in 70,
and the other half who had jumped on the bandwagon
of this free-willing modernism,
which had become so O'Coran at that time.
And so from the inception of my time at the seminary,
there was civil war.
And I was in,
I was in the midst of that civil war.
I was happy to be in the midst of that civil war,
fighting for Mother Church,
and especially for the Mass.
And then 70, we entered the major seminary,
for us, Immaculate Conception Seminary,
which was in the beautiful hills of Marwa, New Jersey.
And the atomic explosion of doctrine-less Catholicism
And the complete demise of moral theology was full-blown when I answered in 70.
That's such a sad, but I think helpful way to put it, the doctrinalist Catholicism.
Because I grew up in the 80s and 90s.
It's in full swing by that time.
It felt like that.
Like, what do we believe?
And it was like, well, God likes you and he loves you.
I'm like, awesome.
Anything else?
Exactly.
Exactly.
And so I entered all the,
ready to do battle and to wage war. See, this is really remarkable because often when these things
take place, we don't have, we can't see them clearly until well after the fact, but you did,
you were able to see that this was not good and you were happy to fight.
And it's at the revolution I was. Now, how were you prepared to see it so clearly? Did you
have good mentors? I remember I had grown up, as I mentioned in my book, Matt, in the Golden
Age of Catholicism, to be in the 50s.
And so everyone in the United States of America, every student in every Catholic grammar school, over to a million of them, received the copy of the Baltimore Catechism in the second grade and were tutored in that until they graduated in the eighth grade.
By the time they graduated, Matt, they would have known the entire Baltimore Catechism by heart in addition to that.
I grew up with the traditional mass, serving it, completely in love with it.
So many of the young men in my grammar school, and this was the case in all grammar schools throughout the country,
was so inspired by these spiritual titans that we called Father,
dressed in their casics, their armor, we wanted to be like them.
But these other people were also brought up with this Baltimore catarice.
And the traditional Latin Mass.
So what happened?
That's a mystery not only to God.
I could remember a priest friend of mine who was ordained in 1966.
So he would have been in the seminary in the relative calm years, because even though
the council had taken place, the bombs had not yet hit.
and he told me that by the end of his time, heresy was beginning to creep in, ever so slightly, by professors who thought there were being terribly up to date and knew.
this was the spirit of the counsel which just ended
and he remarked to me
how could it be that I was raised on the Baltimore
Catechism and the doctrinal formation of the mass
as well as my classmates and his class consisted of 80
and they rejected the faith and I did not
to this day Matt I can only tell you that it was the grace of God
because we were all formed
identically
by this mighty engine
that was the Roman Catholic
Church up until 1965.
So to that question, I
don't know.
In the
seminary in 1970,
we were still permitted to wear
casics. They were not obligatory.
Again, half the
seminary wore the cassocks, the other half did not.
And
there had begun
the loosening of
discipline, ascetical discipline, the discipline of study, the discipline of in every way that used to dominate seminaries, that was crumbling little by little.
And we, I could remember that there was still remnants of it.
So meals were very formal.
The faculty sat on their platformed tables and the seminary sat at the seminary sat at the
in this large refractory,
and only one at every table was designated
to be the one who brought the food to the table
from where the nuns would prepare it in the kitchens.
It was a discipline that I loved,
a tradition that I loved.
That began to fray over the six years that I was there.
But what was happening in the classroom was cataclysmic
because I saw with my very eyes priests,
most of whom no longer believed at the doctor of the church.
I remember the one or two priests was still faithful,
when you could tell that because they wore their cacques.
We flocked to them, for which we got in trouble.
The seminary faculty decided that they had to begin
weeding out any candidates who were showing any kind of partiality
to the Roman Catholic Church as it existed before 1970.
and they had no avenue of dismissing us.
So they adopted the communist method in the Soviet Union,
where if you didn't conform, you were considered to be mentally ill.
And so all of us were not conforming to the heresy in the classrooms,
which was ubiquitous.
Could you give me an example of a heresy taught in a classroom
or the most kind of exaggerated thing you heard?
going, go on.
Oh, Lord Jesus Christ is not God.
No.
Teaching in Catholic seminaries.
Yes.
In Scripture, that was where most of the damage was done, Matt,
because the script professors were saying, you know,
the way the church had interpreted things like the divinity of Christ,
the performance of his miracles,
the perpetual virginity of the mother of God.
These were all, this represented inabilities to understand
the contemporary ways of seeing a text.
And then the script professor would go on to say,
so therefore the church is obligated now to jettison these.
This is 1970.
You couple that, Matt, with going into moral theology class
where the entire moral heritage,
patrimony of the church was rejected,
in order to proffer a whole new, no-how
holds barred, immorality.
Seminarians were being forced to swallow this, and the few of my friends and I who
battled them in the classrooms were all sent to psychiatrists because they declared
that we were mentally ill for stubbornly holding on to a paradigm of the church that was
damaging to Roman Catholics.
that's how they put it
clearly
Matt by
1972
that had
percolated down
to the private
lives
of the seminarians
if Christ is not divine
if he never intended
to establish a Catholic church
what am I doing here
what am I doing here
a celibate social worker
is that what I'm called to be
well
do you understand
they no longer
sure they know
no longer believed in celibacy.
Okay, well, there you go.
All right.
So there was hemorrhaging many, many priests who left the church and married.
But what was left were young men who were not interested in ever marrying women.
Oh.
Even if they had an opportunity.
How did that happen?
You're saying they were homosexuals?
Yes.
And to this day, I don't know how it happened.
It's a very good question.
I've often asked some of my priest friends, how could suddenly, in 19,
1970, 60% of the seminary I was within were subscribing to that agenda.
I don't understand it to this day.
If you had to guess, because you're saying prior to the revolution that took place after the council, this wasn't the case.
No, no.
So the discipline would have so strict, Matt, up until about 1966, right before I entered seminary, that seminary,
that seminarians, when they were in their rooms, cells, were obliged to keep the doors opened.
And if there were any visitation of seminarians to other seminarians, which was only restricted to certain hours of the day,
they would have to talk to their friend over the threshold.
It couldn't even enter the room in the seminarian.
this is about the church's way of putting as many safeguards upon any stray moral infractions that they may be considering.
That along with strict formation with spiritual direction and strict moral theology kept at bay the concupiscence that lies in all of them.
And it worked very well.
Men were cultivated in the way of perfection before 1966.
Gradually, that was all relaxed.
And by 1972, not only could there be visitation in the rooms of the seminarians,
but with the doors closed.
And things were happening in six out of ten seminarians.
to the shock of people like me
who came from a very pious,
Italian, Catholic family
and a wonderful parish
in Jersey City, New Jersey.
And this was incomprehensible to me,
but it was happening before my very eyes.
So the only thing that we could do
was be a vanguard against it,
for which we were punished.
How did you make it through seminary?
Great difficulty.
It's unpleasant.
doesn't even talk about it, Matt.
Yeah.
But they tempted stopping me and other seminarians of my Catholic mind all the way through
to my ordination.
I suppose they considered me to be a rainleader because I would gather together
seminarians and I would instruct them how to refute professors.
For some reason, I was able to take control of the seminary bookstore.
By the time I was two years away from ordination, three years away from one year,
which gave me an opportunity not only to supply professors
but the required texts,
but also to fill the shelves with books I thought they should be reading.
Well, you could imagine what I had on those shelves.
I remember one title that I had ordered.
You're probably familiar with this, Dr. Ludwig Ott's Fundamentals of Catholic Doctrine.
And I said, I have to have this into the hands of these young men
so they can go into the classrooms.
Little did I know I was, you know, needing my own noose.
because one of the dogmatic professors who did not believe in dogma,
came to his classroom one day and said,
I heard that John Perricone has ordered the fundamentals of Catholic dogma
and its honest shells.
I would tell all of you not to buy it because this is simply a relic of a dead past.
Now, if you have seminarians being told this time after time after time,
it would make
concupiscence
very easy
well it appeals
it appeals to the pride too
because you have
the intelligentsia
or at least those who are on top
basically looking down their nose
very condescendingly
at this old relic of the past
and so
and they were looking at
the relic as being 16
over
1900 years of Christianity
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Okay, so this took place in a lot of places around the world.
Almost every seminary.
So yeah.
So here's the question.
Why not think that the Catholic Church is not the Church Christ established then?
Because, I mean, you've got our architecture becoming ugly, our doctrines becoming muddy.
the seminarians, all this stuff going on.
This revolution that took place,
there might be Catholics who are watching this going,
all of that is an excellent argument
against this Catholic Church.
Therefore, the Catholic Church is to be found
in Eastern Orthodoxy or some, you know,
Coptic faith, but not this Roman Catholic thing.
Precisely.
Or being taught that
recently Abu Dhabi documents signed by
the 14th's predecessor.
that all the judges are equal.
That's what they would be too.
That your essential role as a priest is to be a mover of social change.
Yeah.
I cannot tell you Matt how deeply this penetrated half the seminary.
So they were going to go out and be social catalysts for every kind of avant-garde front group.
And they did.
Yeah.
You're bringing back memories that are so unpleasant,
but it was a very unpleasant period.
What was more than unpleasant?
And they recognized that they had to obliterate
everything that bespoke the church before 1970,
as you just mentioned.
It's architecture.
How to be gotten rid of.
It's music.
It's music.
How to get rid of.
It's the vestments of the priest.
It had to be gotten rid of.
I remember that the seminary where I attended had closets upon closets upon closets in the sacristy, upper and lower, filled with vespins that could be in museums.
Yes.
As would be every Catholic church.
But you couldn't wear them.
Not only could you not wear them.
I will never forget them, them hiring a double.
as large as this room.
And seminarians were sighed to take all of these vespins,
and it took them hours to put them in the dumpster.
Again, we are thinking of vestments that were museum quality.
And a few of my friends said, do you see what they're doing?
Let's try to rescue some of them.
The dumps were in front of the Christ, the King Chapel,
and we stationed ourselves near the dumpster.
And when they were looking, we were taking investments, and they caught us.
And they said, put them back on the dumpster.
We said, no, we'd like to send them to the missions.
And they said to me, I'll never forget, no priest ever should wear stuff like this again.
They used a more, a coarser expression for that.
And we watch these vestments be destroyed.
So you had to have the entire raising of the churches that existed with all its architectonic, symbolic structure, having to do with the liturgy, having to the style of priests and the way they dressed and lived.
So, for instance, the casick was no longer required when I was there was abolished soon after I left was ordained.
But they allowed them to be.
wearing this new invention called a clerical shirt.
You've seen it.
There's this little white tear in the middle.
It could be easily removed.
And some of them were wearing that.
Then they decided that was not enough of a separation from the church before 965.
So they started wearing different colored shirts, not black ones.
Now, your audience might think, oh, that's so minor.
It's not minor, man.
symbols are not minor.
Symbols constitute our existence as human persons.
They communicate everything we love and everything we believe.
And so when someone would deliberately not wear black,
which was the dress of Catholic priests for a thousand years,
they did that intentionally with an express purpose in mind.
And I know that for a fact.
They wanted to create a disequilibrium, Matt, where ordinary Catholics would look and say,
but we don't ever remember seeing this, and it was their way of saying, because everything has changed,
down is up, up is down.
It's funny because just about a year ago, I saw a bishop in this country was made a prominent name for himself, man.
wearing a gray white clerical shirt.
You know, this is like a bull seeing a red flag for me.
I know, Matt, why they do this.
See, but I also think there's got to be a distinction made
between at the beginning when these things were implemented
and why they were implemented and then 50 years on.
I think it's fair to say that the reason a Catholic priest might be wearing a white shirt
with a collar, he's not necessarily trying to make the same statement that those you were dealing
with, wouldn't you say? Maybe not, but nonetheless, he does know it's a departure from the tradition,
especially from a bishop who is educated enough because he's quite bright and would recognize
that this is not the tradition of the Catholic Church wearing a different color, clerical uniform.
But you see, this was happening right during the council, Matt, if you see pictures of
our beloved Benedict the 16th.
He, along with many other Germans and French,
Petiti, were attending the council dressed in suit and tie.
Now again, one might say, oh, what is the difference?
It is a huge difference, Matt.
They knew in 1963 when they were attending the sessions of the council,
that they were breaking from,
millennial tradition and they were wanting to telegraph something and that came to bear fruit because
what they were telegraphing was carefully designed i was ordained in 76 uh up until my ordination
they attempted to stop me from being ordained we made a they still had the tradition of before priesthood
the deacons would make a seven-day retreat at the seminary in fact i had had
tried to invite venerable fallen sheen.
And I still have the letter where he kindly,
graciously said he couldn't attend.
And then from that retreat, we would go to the cathedral
would be ordained.
And two days before ordination, I was called
into the rector's office and told I wasn't going to be ordained.
Two days.
My parents were all set to see me at the cathedral.
Whoa.
And I thought, oh my goodness.
what was the reason?
They gave no reason.
They said they thought me to be,
they didn't say this, but they entered Duluthia,
and they thought that I would be a menace to the Catholic people
with my ideas.
I'll never forget going to the chaplain, sobbing,
afraid to call my mother and father.
I pleaded with the mother of God,
please don't let this happen.
I didn't see how it could not happen.
called me in the very next day with the eve of ordination.
He said, we've attempted to devise some kind of reason why you should not be
ordained and we can't come up with one.
That would be convincing to the archbishop who is a heresiac, Peter Liu Garrity.
So you are going to have to ordain you.
But we know who in this seminary are your friends.
And if you attempt to make any disruption by disruption they met introducing the Catholic faith,
And to the parish, we are assigning you, they will be disciplined.
Wow.
Mafia-style tech.
Exactly.
You know, we're not going to kill you, but we're going to kill your family.
I went on to be ordained, and I was sent to a wonderful parish, which I'm sure they were very embarrassed of, always maintaining the faith.
And it was, and that was a glorious time for me, those 10 years.
and then I decided to take up my studies
and I did and I started teaching.
I want to pose that objection to you again.
Why not think that all of this chaos
is an argument against the Catholic Church?
Why?
Because it sounds pretty drastic.
It is drastic what you've shared.
It's chaotic.
Sure it is.
But it may not.
How is this?
This sounds like an argument against Catholicism.
Why isn't it?
Because I knew that the faith would be triumphant,
had to be triumphant.
I knew that the one true faith as it had been, as it had been proclaimed by the Catholic Church for 2,000 years, was the right and true faith.
And I was willing to suffer anything in order to have that Catholic faith revived again.
I never for a moment that had any doubt in my mind, the kind of doubts that were being deliberately cultivated at the seminary and every rectory and every dioces and Chancellor office.
I knew they were all wrong.
Not because I was right, but because our Lord was right, that the Catholic Church was right.
And just as martyrs were called to defend the faith, especially those wonderful English martyrs,
I was called to do the same.
And while I could not hold back the tidal wave that was coming against me, I had to stand there against the tidal wave
and somehow you'll stop
in the small little ways I could
given my little parish
and given the classroom I finally went to
and giving the lectures
I attempted to begin
to cultivate
in many parts of the archdiocese
yes
small clusters of persecuted
confused Catholics
all being robbed of everything
but all I could do are these little things
and I pretty much in the beginning had no support.
I now see that there is a rising of young men
that want to take their place saying to the enemies of the church,
stop within the church.
And it gives such joy.
Joy is not the word, I'm elated.
They make me feel such strength.
There were none of them in 1976 when I was a day.
except a few of my friends.
What's funny is you think that the revolution would have squashed it all down,
and now it's out of memory, and now we've got these new Catholics,
and so they'll get on with the program.
But quite the contrary, we see young people desperate for tradition,
desperate for beauty, desperate for sound, solid doctrine.
This has to be a work of the Holy Spirit.
Okay.
Because it's simply no other way of explaining it.
It shouldn't be, for all the reasons you just talked.
about when there are bishops who are publicly attacking the faith and attacking the mass,
not only the traditional mass, but ordinary mass in some diocese, he's not even permitting Catholics
to take up the reverential position of receiving our Lord on their knees as the church had done
for millennia.
And yet in spite of this frontal assault, these young men are rising.
You know, it makes me very emotional, man, to see it.
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Now, you've written an excellent book of essays.
Your essays have been collected into a book called Tortures Against the Abyss,
which I believe was published with our friend, Pete Kwasniewski's.
Your friend, yes, Peter.
Yeah, so we'll put a link to that below, but I have to say I really loved it.
Thank you.
A lot of people today, and this is unfortunate, but find, like, well, I don't have a lot of time to dig into this big, massive tomb.
But this is short, very edifying essays, I think.
I found it that way.
I really enjoyed them.
People have said that, Matt.
When Peter and I were talking about the value of the book,
some publishers rejected it because they said that collections of essays don't sell.
And, well, I'm not a businessman, I don't understand.
But when I went to Peter, he said, no, I think that this would have a very, very insensatory purpose.
Because as you just said, Matt, their kind of soundbite,
And you could read one in two minutes.
Exactly.
And I think there's enough substance there.
There is.
To do two things.
To ring the bell against the deception.
But then to offer a solution.
And I think you're expressing, well, I think, therefore, is not formidable to a Catholic
because they could say, well, we don't have to read the whole thing through.
Yeah, like if this book.
that Peter gave me, because it's about this thick, right?
If that was just one single volume, I would have thanked him very much, but would have
stayed up on my shelf until who knows when.
But the fact that it was little essays, I'll have my coffee, I'll have my cigar, I'll read
it, and I find it very edifying.
So for those who are watching, we'll put a link below so that people can check that out.
I need to get to this.
You had breakfast with Mother Teresa?
On more than one occasion.
Come on.
Tell us about this, please.
Well, I had, oh, I guess it was around 1987.
I just started teaching at St. John University, and a friend of mine said,
the sisters in the South Bronx, Michigan, which I were looking for a priest to come and say,
may ask for them.
And I knew they were a very Orthodox order, and again, I tried to associate myself with any sprigs of hope.
So I was a bit afraid of the South Bronx at the time, because it was really kind of,
It was named Fort Apache because of the crime is so high.
But I told the woman, tell Sister Priscilla, who was superior to comment,
that I will say mass on every week because I had a looser schedule now that I was teaching.
And so there I would go into the South Bronx.
The good sisters would lock my car in a little space so it would not be vandalized or stolen.
And I would say mass for the sisters.
What a joy that was.
Wow.
And on several occasions, St. Mother Teresa was at my Mass.
And then the sisters would serve breakfast to me,
because they were framed by the old disciplines of the nuns,
they would serve me a beautiful breakfast,
but they were not permitted to eat breakfast with me,
not even Mother Superior, Sister Priscilla,
was from Great Britain.
But Mother would come in and sit with me,
and would chat with me,
And I felt so privileged.
And that happened on two or three occasions.
And our conversations were so telling that.
I could remember once, I could say this, you could edit it out if you like.
Nope.
But I said, Mother, you've been in the worst areas, the sectors of the world imaginable.
And you've seen the greatest evils tell me of all the things you've seen,
what can you tell me is the word evil you've come across?
I suspected she was going to say abortion or euthanasia.
She looked at me without missing a beat, Matt.
She said, communion in the hand.
Wow.
I said, mother, truly.
She said, absolutely, father.
She said, what dishonor to our blessed is Savior.
And I remember she had.
told that very same story to a priest of the archdiocese of New York, who was saying
mass with them occasionally, and it had gotten to the ear of the current ordinary of the
archdiocese of New York at the time. I will mention his name. He wrote an article saying,
how dare Mother Teresa take issue with an approved
discipline of the church.
He reproved her in an article
because this priest
was disclosing to other priests and
other people in his congregations
what she had said about giving in the hand.
Anyway, I came to love her.
What was her personality like?
It was abulient and warm.
engaging.
I remember
one person
who participated
in the Holy See's
investigation of her life
said,
you know that you were in the presence of a saint
when you can't wait
to be with them the next time?
Because she was magnetic.
There with her
gnawled hand, she had hands
like a truck driver.
She did such
such incredible hard work with all the sisters.
She had asked me what I was doing and I said,
Mother, I'm pursuing my doctorate.
And she said, oh, father, is it going well?
I said, well, the tuition is very high
and my archbishop is not paying for it.
She said, oh, well, Father, we may be able to help you.
But you live in absolute poverty.
How could you help me the high tuition of graduate school?
She took leave of me.
He said, may I leave your father?
Yes, well, you.
And afterwards, the Superior of the Combin, Sister Priscilla,
God love her, I don't know where she is now,
came and said to me,
Father, Mother told me you were having a hard time with your tuition.
I said, I am.
She said, well, the missionaries of charity will pay her entire tuition.
And they did.
Wow.
Because of Mother.
Saint Mother Teresa.
Pray for us.
Granted me this favorite prayer.
That is remarkable.
Was she as famous at that point?
She was, yes.
In fact, I guess it was a few months later she addressed the UN.
Wow.
Yes.
And she invited me to be present in the General Assembly room.
I've never said there before.
And so, here I was sitting in the General Assembly as she was addressing the UN.
And tell us what she said.
Is this when she mentioned abortion?
Yes, that's right.
Yeah, that's right. So you get it, it's probably on YouTube.
But it was so impressive. And she was on relenting about it.
I know. How did you feel as she was kind of stating these firm truths?
I thought like standing up and shering her, full well-recognizing Matt.
That so many of the priests I knew and so many at the seminary would probably hate her for saying this.
Because to them, it was simply a very easy option.
You have to remember that, I don't mind mention in his name.
Jesuit Father Robert Drennan, who was elected to the House of Representatives, I think in mid-80s,
was one of the major proponents of abortion in the house.
So this is the mood at the time that anything went except the traditional doctor of the church,
not disciplined by the Society of Jesus, but yet other priests who might know so well who were Jesuits,
Father Brebooth, Father Vincent Machelli,
were being cast aside and hidden
because they were embarrassment to the society.
So you have to understand that that speech
not only upset the intelligentsia
of the United States of America and the ruling elites,
but certainly of the Roman Catholic Church.
You had Joseph Bertadine,
Carter Joseph Bernstein,
who was the prince of the American Hieronym,
for all the times that he was in office who developed what he called the time to sing this garment
where without saying it he was trying to devalue the moral importance of being opposed to abortion
by saying it was part of a garment of pro-life very clever these people mad i think would not at least as a
cardinal would not come out and say oh you catholics making a big fuss about abortion leave it aside that would
caused too much of a splash, even at that time. So how did he design his dissent? I'll set up a weapon
where we'll talk about many different issues of life and how dare they consider capital
punishment to rank anywhere in its sinfulness with abortion. But that's the kind of thing he was
doing. Yes, this was... So, she...
She caused consternation, Matt, to many inside the church as well.
Thank God for holy nuns.
I'm thinking of another holy nun who I'm sure you've met, Mother Angelica.
Oh, I was on her program twice, Matt.
Yes, I was privileged to be on her program twice.
These good, beautiful lionesses who stand up against the chaos.
It was a great, great day when she came on the program.
I must have been a priest a few years.
And she was wearing a modified habit, though.
And at that time, we took what we could.
Yes.
And she appeared on the following program in the full Franciscan habit that we now know.
And she said, I'm doing this in order to show you religious what you should look like.
God bless her.
I think that was, wasn't that in part, a response to the shenanigans at the World Youth Day in Denver where they made a shieler.
You might be right.
You might be right. Do you remember that? They put a woman
actor during the Stations of the Cross
Yes, I do. She was furious
and she went on, turned on the cameras
and she went off. It was lovely.
Yes, she was. She was a bull
and she took no prisoners, as
it should be. Yeah.
You know, also at those masses, I know
that this was the fond
fond
hope of
St. Jean-Paul
II that it was attracting youth and many
many of you came there, but I think that he was missing something because at those masses,
and there were photographs taken of sacred host being cast to the ground, and then being
collected by staff into large garbage bags and deposit.
God, have mercy.
I have to say, my conversion to Jesus Christ was at World Youth Day in Rome.
So no matter what shenanigans took place, it was a good, he used it for me.
He used it for me.
Well, I wouldn't call World Youth Day and Evil.
No, well, out of those practices.
that were occurring.
There were evil practices that took place, perhaps,
but I didn't see them personally.
But I went as an angsty, agnostic kid
who thought Jesus was for idiots and old people.
And then I encountered happy people
who weren't sarcastic or sardonic or cynical.
And I thought, who were these people?
And they were attractive.
They didn't make any sense to me.
He did make a great, great, great mark on the church.
With these youth days,
it's funny because my crotchety old age,
I look back at those,
Those desecrations, Matt, which fill me with great sorrow.
And I guess I paint the entire world youth day with that brush.
And maybe I shouldn't.
And it's good you told me what you did tell me.
I'll never forget that.
And I'll communicate it to others.
No, I really, I really will.
Well, it is hard, isn't it?
I mean, when you've endured so much evil and so much intentional deception,
it's hard for all of us.
Maybe this is just the truth about getting older in general where it's, you know,
and I'm not saying you're cynical, but I think the temptation
towards cynicism. I understand it because at least that way I can't be let down.
It's like a giving up in a way, I think, a cowardly way to go out if you just look at the
world and go, well, it's all going to hell, which is not at all what, I'm not accusing
you of that. Your book is the opposite of that. But you are right about that. And I find that
with some of my priest friends, older priest friends, it's not the case, but the new priests that
I'm meeting. I am now doing the traditional mass in a,
new parish, I just told you. The pastor is John Mary Vianney. Only 11 years ordained a priest.
And his curate is just as holy. And it brings tears to my eyes. I thought, my dearest savior,
I never, never dreamt that I would see such a revival of the faith. And here are these two priests
right before me. Wow. And they're not cynical. And they're not despairing. They're just so happy
that they could take the parish where they are
and give them the patrimony of the Catholic faith.
That's what makes them happy.
Some of my older priest friends
have settled into a kind of despair.
One of them,
a very brilliant theologian and philosopher,
well, I count as a very dear friend.
One variable be called me at least once every two weeks
and say to me, John, I'm sinking.
I see this, this,
wall of
descent and the synodality
and the bishop is being
appointed and
I just don't know what to do anymore
and I
felt so awfully bad for him because
he's such a good priest and we've become such good friends
and as a priest
Matt I don't want to stop preaching to him
as a friend because he's my equal
and all I can tell him is that
there are sprouts of
green. Tell us about these sprouts of green that you're seeing, would you? Well, those, no words,
these priests. I met, I had to go to a, uh, a place in New York for some reliquaries, because we need
reliquaries on the altars for the salvation of mass. And a few of my friends accompanied me
that I hear with me today. And I walked in and there was this very young man in a Roman collar,
rabbi as I'm wearing and he was very gracious and I said father how boy you sort of father
I I'm not a priest shall be a priest in two years his mom and dad were there they were going to be
perching his chalice very moving moment and I said oh it's so nice to meet you and where
you're studying and I don't want to divulge many details and he's studying for a midwestern
archdiocese not the best and I
I told him my name.
And that he said, oh, father, myself and my seminary and friends are reading your book.
I'm not saying that for vanity's purpose, but the hope that there are these young men who are feeding themselves
and are looking for places to feed themselves at the trow of a mother church's teaching.
And he was joyful.
Yeah.
And he was happy.
And I said to him,
you're in a difficult
archdiocese.
And without any kind of
regis, yes, I am.
And I said,
Matter of factly.
Matter factly,
there's work to do.
That was his attitude.
I'm not going to grumble about it.
In fact, his attitude,
I find it exciting.
Wow.
And I said,
will you say the traditional mass
when you're ordained?
He looked at me and he said,
absolutely farther,
and all my friends will.
First, first.
a sprout of green.
You.
Secondly, the audience that you have,
again, I begged your forgiveness
before the interview of not knowing about you,
only because I'm a little bit antediluvian
about media and things like that.
Like I said to you before, I'd rather sit down
with St. Thomas' someone contrary to Tintillas.
But when people began to tell me
about the breath of the
people that you are reaching.
I simply said to myself,
this represents the triumph of the faith in Matt Frad.
And it represents the dying on the vine
of the heretics who wanted to replace it.
Even though they are still yelling and shouting,
I really believe that they are as shrill as they are,
because they know they have lost.
The death throws of the,
Their throw is they know they're still managing the levers of power and they still have the money and they're still control of all you see.
But I think they know their end has come.
But how else can you explain the frenetic, hysterical reactions to the presence of the traditional mass and all the young people that is attracting?
Yeah, and they're not being told to do it.
They're seeking it out.
You know?
So, yeah, your program.
I look at, it's funny because I shouldn't be advertising people,
but so many new public companies are spreading out.
And they are republishing that.
Marvelous classics that the modernists tried so very, very hard to bury forever.
What would you say that the kind of modernist project was?
What were they trying to replace?
Catholicism with? Because, I mean, I've had the same experience as you, even in the 90s. I remember
after my conversion in the year 2000, meeting uninhabited nuns, God bless them. I'm sure they had a
difficult life and I'm not, I don't want to judge them who the hell knows what they went through.
But, you know, telling me that the church doesn't teach contraception is evil and just on and on and on.
What was there, what did they want to turn Catholicism into?
A catalyst for a kind of Marxist change, truly, man.
You had people like liberation theologians who were doing that,
Leonardo Bauff, Gustavo Gutierrez, who were proffering a Roman Catholicism without God.
And I think this was their aim.
Certainly the demise of our traditional world disorders represented that kind of dream, a utopian.
without God, a secularist model.
It's St. Paul's acknowledging a religion while denying its power.
That's right. And I think that was their dream. They no longer wanted any mention of the supernatural
or the transcendent. They thought that these were damaging to man's human dignity. Because
after all, what was one of their models and their siren songs, man has come of age. I heard that
adenosium in the seminary.
And men come of age, no longer need a religion that's constantly talking about the supernatural
and constantly talking about the cross and hope of resurrection.
This is irrelevant to me.
You know, Udorf Boltman.
Until the end of his life, he had written the demonthalutization books.
He got up into his pulpit in the Black Forest, Matt,
and he opened up the text of the gospel.
He read it.
And then he closed it.
He was supposed to preach a sermon.
He placed the Bible on the pulpit left.
Went into the sacristy.
I'm preparing myself.
I don't know the story, but I'm not looking forward to it.
Went into the sacrity and began to sob.
Oh, that took a tracrstead.
turn. And his sacristan said, doctor, what is the problem? Eyes filled with tears, he turned to the
sacristan and said, I have nothing to say. He meant that he had successfully decapitated, revealed
religion. Wow. By demothologizing the entire New Testament. His book was on the seminary
lists for required reading all throughout the world. And he knew what he had done. It reminds me of
Ernst Renan's friend Beauvais in France after he had written the life of Christ, his first attempt,
even before Baltimore of demythologizing the New Testament. But they said, we have finally accomplished
what we thought was impossible. We have dethroned Jesus Christ as a member of the Trinity.
This is what they were after.
It infected everyone, everyone.
And the problem, now, that's what I experienced and your experience, but as far as the sprouts,
I see young people coming to the traditional mass as you do.
And all they are hungering for is the catechism.
They are hungering for the traditional mass.
They want to be saints.
And this is so alien to the utopian spirit that was being prophet what I was praying.
And that continues to be prophet.
I just heard the quote by priest's friend sent me a quote by the new Archbishop of Westminster.
I don't even remember his name.
He actually boasted about the fact that I have to bring the Catholic Church in England to new places that he never knew before.
Well, I know what those new places are going to be.
And I almost felt like saying to him, but you've brought England there now and all you have is a corpse.
But they still think there's work to be done.
That shouldn't depress us, man, because they are the past.
And you are the future.
Not me.
I'm an old man now.
But that brings great buoyancy to me and to others.
and they're not going to look at the chaos, this decay.
There are too many wonderful things happening.
Why do we need Thomas Aquinas?
Why should we pick him up again and read him and teach him in our seminaries?
And what was the result of throwing him away?
I said in one of my essays,
if you saw it, I think, is entitled to Aquinas to anyone
on trying to be as wild about that as possible.
And I call him the fortress of Mother Church,
the impregnable fortress.
And when that fortress is breached, the faith is breached.
His quasi-angelic intellect gave us an apologia for the faith that appealed to both the faith, the wisdom of the faith, but also to reason, which made it impregnable.
Why else did Pius, did Leo the 13th, two years after he was seated on throne of St. Peter, Wright's, Ted Nepotides?
And he says the only way to reconstruct the world, because it was the whole European edifice was the decay, is returned to the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas.
And in that marvelous encyclical, he went through all the reasons why, because he represented the appellate.
of what human reason could do.
He did not in any way
make it equivalent to the faith,
but made it an indispensable path to the faith.
So that reason was given its proper respect,
as it ought to be, by Almighty God,
made an image and likeness,
but it doesn't replace the faith that brings us to the faith.
He has this marvelous combination of faith and reason.
which in a certain sense, man, exalts the human person.
And yet he gives us an understanding of the faith
that makes us understand that as exalted as we are made
in the image likeness of God, we are still his creatures
and without his grace can do absolutely nothing.
In that same encyclical, you recall that he said
this angelic doctor,
what he called a common doctor now,
to make sure that he stood
over and over all the other doctors
of the church,
he said he takes the entire
tradition of the church up until him,
meaning the great fathers and doctors,
and he makes all of them his own.
This is amazing.
So that when we read Aquinas,
we are making the whole tradition
of the church our own.
So when you say,
why is Aquinas necessary?
Because no one has been able to do this any better
than that humble Dominican monk.
And he did it with the utmost gentleness,
charity, and childlikeness.
Like you, I remember so many of those stories
of that childlikeness.
One of them was he was deep walking in the cloister,
deep in prayer or probably
reflection upon some difficult
metaphysical problem.
And a very playful
brother came up to him
and said, Father Thomas,
Father Thomas, come with me.
There are pigs flying in the sky.
And he stopped.
And with this Hulk,
he, breathless, he followed the brother.
And he looked up at the sky.
He said, where are they?
And the brother said,
oh, I was only kidding with you.
Why did you come with me?
And he said with child likeness
because I never thought a brother
would not tell me the truth.
Yes.
Well, I can go on,
a disposition of why he's so necessary.
Look what happened
because we jettisoned Aquinas.
The second Vatican Council
just blew off like a wheel
detachmentous axle.
Of course, this is all carefully being
cultivated by attacks upon the angelic doctor for the entirety of the first part of the 20th century.
And one of my great, great heroes, as I'm sure he is for you, Matt, Father God of Gula Gron,
talk about a warrior. He battled these people, the Daniluus, the Scillabex, the Congars, Labaudet,
and were trying to say that a new historical understanding of the Catholic faith
should detach us from this overly st.
St. Thomas put us in.
Little did they know that this false encasement of milk
that contains the milk.
It makes sure the milk is safe.
It's contained in one spot.
Doesn't detract from the milk,
but without the encasement,
we wouldn't have the milk.
Aquinas is that encasement.
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You mentioned the summa contra gentiles, and I love that.
I find that more fun to read than the Summa Theology Day.
Many people say especially scholars, yeah.
Yeah, and I think what I loved, of course, I'm sure you remember it, is what he had to say about Muhammad.
The blistering words he had for Muhammad.
Yes.
And I'm concerned that there are Christians who think that there can be some sort of...
Yeah.
A rapprochema.
Yeah, with the Mohammedans.
Why is that not the case?
Why should we see Islam as a threat?
I first want to say what Aquinas would say,
we have to love them,
they're made in the image of likeness of God.
We have to hate their pernicious error.
And not for one moment, Matt,
allow sentimentality to enter into that charity,
Akkaditas.
Yes, we love them because they are made
the image of likeness of God,
But that love means that what we must give them as the truth.
St. Thomas is the greatest exercise of holy charities to tell men the truth.
Yeah, I remember a bishop in Australia, God bless him.
I won't give any more information than that.
Trying to say how we're like the Mohammedans because we're both people of the book,
this is what leads Catholics to lose their faith because there's no faith.
There's no content to adhere to anymore.
And then we wonder why we abandon it.
What would they say, matter of our Lord's words, I am the way, the truth and the life.
I am the way, the truth and the life.
No one shall come to the Father except through me.
The Ascension, you know, go forth and teach all nations, teaching them what I have taught you.
There's no doubt in anyone, no doubt in the divine to the church for all the years of 1965, that this is the one true church.
and we had to give up our lives and our breath telling them,
and certainly recognizing that where there is error,
we have to identify it,
and we have to fight against it,
and we have to marshal every argument to protect Catholics from it.
And now suddenly we abandon that vocation
that is all of ours as Catholics
to see nothing of being the vocation of shepherds of the Catholic.
Catholic Church. And to say that somehow it is equitable with the Roman Catholic faith,
this is going to do exactly what you say is going to mislead so many Catholics who are not
astute enough to recognize that maybe sometimes bishops are not telling us the truth.
And in their naivety, think, well, if a bishop has said it or if a department of the Holy See has
said it, it must be true. So I just have to embrace, you know,
Islam, and that's exactly what's happening, even more so in Europe than it's happening here.
I read several churches in Belgium have now given their beautiful churches over to Islamic worship.
Again, the teaching, the suggestion is they're just as good as we are.
And they are not.
And Catholics should not be afraid of saying they are a false religion.
And if they need any more proof, look at the scorching critique that St. Thomas gives.
of Mohammedism.
Yeah, and as you point out, and I'm glad that you did that,
that none of this, just like the critiques of the revolutions
that took place after the Second Vatican Council,
are not a judgment or a critique of any individual
who has been taught these ambiguities.
You see, we should love them and we should love our Muslim,
brothers and sisters.
But if Catholicism is true and it is,
then we don't love them by allowing them or by not correcting them and by not re-emboldening the faith of Catholics to know what truth is, what error is.
I read a study recently that said if Europe stops all immigration entirely, that Europe will be a Muslim, you know, country or, you know, by 2050 or something like that.
most popular name for children in Great Britain now is Mohammed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So they couldn't take it during the time of the Crusades, but it looks like they're taking it now.
Mm-hmm.
So what do we do?
Is that we have a lot of European listeners who watch this?
Well, simple Catholics simply cannot, cannot tolerate this.
In their own way, to fellow Catholics and even to priests, when they speed this nonsense from a
pulpit or an adult education class, have to raise their hands.
hands and saying, Father, you are absolutely wrong.
Muhammadism is a false religion.
Every religion is false.
They may have some tidbits of truth that we could look at, but that does not make the
religion true.
Only the Roman Catholic faith is the true religion.
They have to tell their fellow Catholics.
That's one of the spiritual works of mercy to instruct the ignorant, isn't it, Matt?
And a wonderful way to exercise it during Lent.
I would consider that
unto the rubric of almsgiving.
Arms giving is relieving
the estate of the poor
and whole of the poorest of the poor
but those Catholics who have been left with nothing
they're destitute of the faith.
First thing.
And then every time that this nonsense
is spouted by a bishop
or a hierarch
to simply
write a letter
or tell your fellow friends
with all respect to his office
because he has a success of the apostles.
This is wrong.
And you cannot fall for it.
We're seeing hope in Europe, though.
I just read a newspaper article that said that baptism, adult baptisms are through the roof in France.
I heard that.
Yeah.
Come on.
Talk about St. Thomas Aquinas that the greatest act of God's power is to draw good out of evil.
And this is what's happening there.
This is the reason why we have to have hope.
and smiles on our faces and be a bullion because this is happening throughout the church universal
yet old god is still there they don't they remind you mad of the old you're too young to remember
in the in the heyday of the soviet union they would have their mayday parades
which the reason my pious of the 12 established the st joseph the work on may first to counteract that
And what would happen is the gerontocracy of the Soviet Union would gather on this platform high above the red square where they were marching out nuclear missiles and all their armaments.
And they were old men.
They were wheezing.
They could not even see anymore.
But they were holding this geocrepid failing Soviet empire somehow together.
And it fell one day, as we all know.
with all due respect to the hierarchies of the church,
they remind me of that gerontocracy of the Soviet Union.
Old men trying to hold up a tissue, an empire of lives.
And it's falling apart.
And you see that in the joy of,
I just have these beautiful Dominican sisters here from Nashville.
There's like a hundred and something of them in this lovely motherhouse here in Nashville.
I get the vocational literature, you know.
I have the two beautiful sisters of life.
I'm sure you're familiar.
I know them very well.
Coming on recently and they're just joyful and beautiful.
And they look beautiful.
The habit is beautiful.
So important.
Yeah.
Because it just fills up with such a joy, doesn't it for you and I?
To see them.
Nothing makes me happier.
The only thing that makes me happier than seeing a nun and a habit is a priest in a casick.
I love the casso.
Tell me, how do we encourage our priests to wear the cassock?
Whenever I see a priest's like, I always thank him for doing it.
Number one.
Number one?
Because I'm sure they get.
A lot of.
criticism and if when they go to the yassas and priest meetings they're shunned that's tough
so how do we encourage them then um that we the catholic people need you to be an icon of christ
for me when i look at you i'm like here's a man who takes his priesthood seriously exactly
and since i take my sin seriously i would like you to take it seriously and i can tell that
immediately by what you're wearing all at once this is the power of the symbol isn't yeah in the 90s
priest would say, yeah, call me Jim.
I'm like, okay, Father Jim.
You're all Father Jim for whoever.
I'm not saying a particular priest.
Sons clerical dress.
Oh, I knew that type very, very well.
That type has faded because that was my generation and they're either dying or I was going
to say in jail, but I don't want to say that.
But they are no longer with us and this new crop of seminarians are coming.
But yes, when you see a priest, tell them you're happy he's wearing Kessig.
And then to other priests.
Yeah.
Say, you know, I would love you to wear the kassig.
I saw Father So and So, and he's only 27.
He was wearing the K, it made such an impression on me.
Or I saw a priest in a restaurant in New York, which is happy to be frequently, people being so differential and filled with a sense of relief, almost a sense of protection, Matt, to see the Kassi is like, here's Hercules.
that's the title of one of my essays
if you read it yet the priest is Hercules
and that's what we stand
we stand like Olympiads for the Catholic people
but the dress is all important
we have to wear the casick
the great thing
Cory of ours wore his cassock it was threadbare
but he's never without it
because people there saw
a protection from
the awful
effects of a secularist world.
Yeah.
That, like you mentioned, you're trying to tear you to pieces, but the priest protects
you. And this is his armor.
I think this is a good question for any layperson out there.
Like, if I said to myself, all right, suppose I'm on my deathbed, do I want a man like you
coming through the door or someone who's like, call me Bob?
No, I don't want Bob.
I love you, Bob, but you don't know who you are.
So how can you help me?
That's the essence of it, isn't it?
If a priest doesn't know who he is, how is he going to help others to know what they are?
poor sinners in need of the grace of Christ.
Yes, the priest in the kessik means everything.
It's his, he understands his own identity.
And the Catholics who see him know he understands his own identity.
And he draws him like a magnet.
The kessik is a magnet.
I remember walking into an elevator about a year ago,
the friends of my layman,
and we're going up to a restaurant on third floor.
And when I walked into the elevator with them,
They're already a family, a Spanish family,
mother and father, seven or eight children.
And when I walked in,
the mother and father said in Spanish,
kneeled down,
Father is here.
But all these children knelt down.
And I blessed them.
And these are the great joys of my priesthood.
But that's the kind of reaction
that good Catholic should have.
Here is Father.
The room should light up.
Yes. And think of how they would have been scolded if it were another priest, perhaps.
Oh, don't, don't be.
Which I think is an act of pride, actually.
Of course.
Like when the bishop doesn't allow me to kiss his hand and God love him,
or when the priest doesn't allow me to call him father, it's like, this is not about you actually.
Like, this feels more prideful than just allowing me to show you honor.
You're absolutely right, Matt.
It's a proclamation, look how humble I am.
Maybe it's even fear of how you ought to comport yourself.
Do you know what I mean?
That's, of course.
Please don't treat me like that because then I'll have to live up to that.
It's a very, very good point.
And that's the reason why so many shed clerical garment and
critical garb altogether, Matt, because they didn't want to live up to the expectations
that they know Catholics have with the priest.
That indeed was the case when I was in the seminary.
They didn't want anything to do with this symbol that represent
presented a life of perfection.
Aquinas says in one of his apostola
that
the reason why
the priests of religion,
Franciscan and Dominicans,
I have to take the vows because
they are on their
way to becoming perfect.
But the diocesan priests doesn't take the vows
because before he's ordained,
he knows he must be perfect.
in the interior life.
And I've never forgotten that.
Father Goda Goulogalach writes two beautiful books, Matt, on the priesthood.
If any priests are listening, you should get them and read them for Lent.
The priesthood and perfection.
And the second book was the priest union with Christ.
I hope they're both in print.
Maybe Clooney has put them in print.
You know, something just occurred to me.
It seems like part of what was going on in the 70s and 80s, maybe.
in sort of eradicating solid teachings on doctrine and morals
was we want to alleviate people of guilt
so that they can just be free.
But it just struck me that it's the lack of solid doctrine
that has perhaps led to scrupulosity.
In other words, if there's no content that I know about
and yet I'm still burdened, I know that I'm not as I should be,
but I haven't been taught what is virtuous
and what is vicious.
Do you see what I mean?
If I don't know how,
to act, if I don't know what I should repent of, then I'm...
I have a slight reservation to that, Matt, because you have to understand that most
parishes on most continents are being towards certainly in America.
They no longer have the reservations you've just described to, which they did.
Because if they are told each and every week, like an antiphon, God loves you just the way you
are.
Well, Mike, you don't longer feel guilty about anything because there isn't any sin.
I see.
So you're saying that, yeah.
But, yeah, all right.
And if you listen to one prominent Jesuit,
who's publisher of a magazine,
who's constantly telling us that serious infractions
of the Sixth Commandment are simply ways of showing love.
Yeah.
And he's not stopped.
I simply say I don't think Catholics have any kind of scrupulosity about anything.
Okay.
Because they have not been taught.
Well, maybe let me rephrase that. I would agree with you that if I don't accept the moral law, then perhaps there's not much room for guilt.
Or thinking that there is one? Yeah. But I think there's also a lot of young Catholics are in the church. I guess that's who I'm referring to.
Okay. They know they're guilty. They want to repent. They want to love Jesus Christ and be good man and good women. But if they haven't been given clear instructions on what is vicious and what is virtuous, you see, the importance of a tender conscience.
This is very important, but the error of scrupulosity.
There is a distinction there.
There is, and it might lead to excess, because I'm not given the proper direction of the church by the priests which should be giving it to them.
So they'll look at land, for instance, and say, now, this used to be the time of asceticism and fasting and bringing our bodies into subjection.
But if they don't have the guidance of a priest, that will likely be taken to excess.
And I see that happening a lot.
And I have to correct it.
I said, no, no, you are not doing it.
Let us talk about doing small things.
It can be just as efficacious for our Lord.
With consistency, not flashes.
Exactly.
And so you're right, but the priest needs to be doing that direction.
I guess you're right in that.
Because I do see that.
Because with these sentiments that these young people have,
they know they are being called to God somehow.
They're not being taught how because they don't have the priest teaching them.
So it becomes a do-it-yourself asceticism, which is very dangerous.
St. John of the course tells us that it leads either to despair because you just find,
I can't do this, or pride.
I'm better than the rest because look what I'm doing, slend.
Look, there are a lot of people who watch this show, and hopefully they'll tell us in the comments
who are converts to the Catholic faith.
And everywhere I go, I meet people in the airport and in bookstores and shoe stores,
and they're saying, I watch a show,
I love that interview you did with so-and-so,
I converted this last Easter, you know,
praise the Lord.
What advice do you have to them
on how to begin developing their,
what is the interior life and why should we care?
How should they develop it?
The interior life is simply doing everything
for Arbriottom Day of Gloria,
everything we do in the course of the day
for the greater honor and glory of Almighty God.
And that doesn't omit anything.
From the moment they wake up
and have to ruin their cells,
to face the world, that's being done for the honor and glory of God, my dear friends out there.
And so therefore you should do with perfection.
Waiting for the light and it might be late for work and might be an exclamation of impatience.
And recognizing, no, this is a chance for virtue.
I will not be impatient on my autumn day of glory and be giving my life to Almighty God.
and going to the office and
and putting up with unfairness perhaps
or, you know, obstreperous people who are at the office,
another mortification, you see,
and at my autumn day of gloria.
And what is happening is a Catholic begins to see that
I don't have to do these long fass
that do it yourself,
serious Catholic will be doing,
think of it. Because these little mortifications are just as significant to our Lord, and they
involve as much mortification. How else are they going to... All of this is being done for the honor
and glory of Almighty God, the smallest things. What they might want to do is read Deco Sard's
abandonment to divine providence. Okay, yes. A great, great French classic. And they will see
that sanctity is something that every kind of...
Catholic can do. Every Catholic can become a saint. Every Catholic's called to become a saint. And this
becomes a joyful venture. Because when we are cooperating with God's graces and sanctifying every part of
the day and all the work of the day and all the people that I come in contact with, especially
in my family members, and what will happen, especially engaging in that beautiful prayer with our Lord
in our own words, which Mother Church has classic a good cold mental prayer.
What does our Lord do?
He promised that I will send you the Holy Ghost.
And he transforms the soul.
And what he leaves with us are the 12 fruits of the Holy Spirit.
So I'm going to encourage your audience to go to your catechism, look up the 12 fruits of the Holy Spirit.
I will give you the first three.
You'll see the rest.
Joy, peace, love.
This is what you'd characterize.
every Catholic, who is falling more and more in love with our Lord Jesus Christ, crucified every day.
And that will allow, as Chesterton put it, Matt, it will allow goodness to run wild.
That's lovely.
That is our whole raison d'être as Catholic to let goodness run wild.
But in order for that goodness to be released, I have to say no to sin.
I have to work on those defects that I have, and I best do that with a Father confessor.
Because he's the guide what the church has given me, so I don't do either too much or too little that I get it just right.
That wonderful prudence that the angelic doctor talks about, which is so critically important to the Roman Catholic.
What are some private devotions of yours, be it the rosary or some other method?
that are praying that has meant a lot to you
and that you recommend to others?
Of course, the rosary.
Of course, the Angelus,
I don't know if Catholics are doing the Angelus
every day, three times a day.
Very important, that contact with our lady.
Very important we cultivate our friendship
with our guardian angel.
How do you do that?
By simply speaking to him all throughout the day
before I came into this interview.
I said to him,
I'm doing this interview with Matt.
And I admire the work he's doing, and all the Catholics that he reaches, will you please give me the light I need to say the right things and think the right courts and deliver it in a way that Catholics will find this a track of an appealing?
So pray to our guardian angel.
Our morning offering is very important because it sets the pace for the entire day.
If I want to do everything for Art by Autumn Day, Gloria on that, then that wonderful morning offering, which we found in the Catechism,
I say that as soon as I wake up in the morning,
the first thing I do when I open my eyes,
and then I would suggest to them,
this might be a little bit too dramatic for some,
but kneel down and kiss the floor
as though we're kissing the feet of Christ crucified,
and then simply saying that beautiful prayer,
which consists of one word,
Sedvia.
I will serve thee today and everything.
Catholics will, of course, recall that it was the don of Sedviam of Lucifer
that cast them into hell.
We are going to recoil from that.
We are going to repair that.
You see, but little thing.
Yeah, this reminds me of Jose Maria Escriber.
Are you an admirer, a follower?
I had great, great admiration for him.
I dedicated my chalice to him many years before he died.
And I have, of course, particular devotions.
All of us have a particular saint that we have great affection for
and cultivate that devotion to the saints.
I happen to love St. Joseph.
I've been making a constant overview.
vina for the beatification
countenization of venerable Fort and Sheen
for which he has given me many, many favors already, Matt.
Had you ever met him?
No, at once.
He gave a talk at a parish in Jersey
and I just shook his hand
ever so briefly.
But I was very, very privileged.
I spent 10 years of my first years of teaching
as a resident in the rectory of St. Agnes
in Midtown Manhattan, the very famous church,
the very church where Fulton Sheen preached
to seven last words.
And I can't tell you the thrill I received
when I first ascended the pulpit of St. Agnes
to know that that great, great preacher
who had such a profound effect upon my life.
Is that right?
preached, the seven last words.
Yes, to have great effect.
The saints are our friends,
and they are our models,
and they are very, very efficacious.
for us to pray to them.
Everyone will pick different saints.
Yeah.
Well, the Guardian Angel thing is still very interesting to me
because that's not something I was taught at all.
And then as I became...
Start it tonight.
Yeah.
As I became a Catholic, I heard that, of course,
you know, angel of God.
Yes.
Which is lovely.
But I don't...
I don't...
Maybe I'm not listening to the right people,
but I'm not hearing an emphasis on this.
Like, you just gave it.
You should.
So I'm glad that you did that.
And talk to them in an intimate personal way.
Yeah.
I need you to help me with this interview today.
Oh, I need you to help me with my taxes.
I need you to help me with the children.
I need for you to help me make this business decision.
I need you better help me now, you know, yeah.
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15% with code Pints 15. Well, it sounds like what you're talking about too fits in nicely with
Therese of Liseu, that beautiful queen of mine. Yeah. Yes. Her little way, yeah. Because it's like
she focused on what was small. She gave attention to what was small and her world was ginormous.
we walk around just dismissing everything that's small
and our world feels very tiny and narrow
and a perfect way of putting it, a perfect way of putting it.
I have great devotion to her as well.
I'm not going to go through all of them.
And I have pictures of them all over my residence.
And to be in their company is so beautiful
and to think that this was robbed from Catholics,
the whole communion of saints
and now we have to bring it back.
And you and I have to be apostles of the saints
and cultivate, help Catholics to cultivate devotion
to the saints in their lives.
And begin with the guardian angels.
Are you encountering a lot of people converting to Catholicism
in your parish in the diocese?
Not converting to Catholicism
as coming back to the faith.
We call them reverts.
An awful lot of them.
I come across an awful lot of young.
people. I give her men's retreat every year and a woman's retreat. Women's coming right up.
And there must be at least 140 men who attend this retreat. And I would say about 75% of them
are under the age of 40. It is quite remarkable, Matt, to look at these young men who want to be
soldiers for Christ, they want to go into the battlefield for Christ. And it just brings me a
whole rejuvenation of my aging priesthood to see. So I do see that. And so they're all
converts. And to see their fervor and their willingness to make any sacrifices in order to
promote the faith and they want to understand the faith and go deeper and deeper into the
riches of the faith. And they recognize that the faith represents riches. And they're not,
they will no longer be fooled by the lives. So I see, I see them coming to my lectures
that I give twice. Yes, I see them constantly yet. It's a great joy for me.
How should we view the Holy Father during this time of kind of immediate access?
I remember even when Pope Francis was elected, there wasn't live streaming on YouTube the way there is today.
I remember I had to keep refreshing to see who it was and then five minutes, ten minutes later.
Wikipedia had an article on him.
But now everybody with the camera like myself and others is saying the things they think everyone needs to hear.
and we could probably all do some good by hearing less of it,
including what I have to say.
But it can really rattle people
because we have constant access to what the Holy Father is saying
and what he just did.
May I suggest what simple thing for Catholics to do?
Please.
Don't listen to what he's saying.
Pray for him every day.
Okay.
Offer acts of mortification from every day.
and if enough Catholics pray fervently
he will become like his namesakely the 13th
and he will begin to roar the Catholic faith
and you and I met and every Catholic will say
I never thought this could happen
and it will but it depends upon us
not worrying about him
because we have to be candid
some of the things he's been saying are worrisome.
But by not listening to that, we're not going to be upset.
Yeah.
Because what good does being upset do for us as Catholics?
It sends us, makes us grumpy, makes us speak complaints, and it's simply not good.
So to clarify, you're not saying don't listen to the Holy Father.
No, I'm not.
I just don't be on the internet listening.
24-7.
Yeah.
What did he say in this airplane interview?
What did he say?
What's going on?
And I think we ought to pay attention when he's confirming us in the faith.
And when he's saying things that are a little bit unusual to the faith, we say a memorary for him.
And with all due respect, listen and say, well, that doesn't quite fit with the deposit of the faith.
And move on.
not to go to our friends and say,
do you hear what he said?
Because what does it create?
It creates number one anger.
And someone creates a kind of despair.
Yes, that's what you see a lot.
Yeah, and what good does that do us in the end?
To be angry and to be in despair.
So one should just simply pray from every day.
And for those who don't want to do that, well, I think we just kind of, you know, just talk about, I don't know, growing asparagus with them.
Okay.
But not, but, you know, not.
And it doesn't mean that we are ostriches that are with our head in the sand.
It means when he says something that's unusual, we simply say a memorari for him.
Yeah, yeah.
And maybe say to our friends, yes, he did say something unusual, but, gee, I have to.
talk to five men who won the catacism today.
And I'm trying to talk about him now.
Yeah.
I want to make a novena.
I take care of my children.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it was Dr. Ed Faiser.
It was Dr. Ed Faiser, who I think is terrific.
Oh, he's marvelous.
Has he been on your program?
He has.
He has.
And it was an honor.
And I really hope to get him on again.
But he said,
he brought up a good point.
He says the failure of the Holy Father or this or that bishop or cardinal or priest or
you know, lay philosopher or something, if there's failures there to uphold the Catholic
faith, to condemn what ought to be condemned, okay, that doesn't relieve us of the responsibility.
It doesn't really me of the responsibility to say what is true and to condemn what is false when,
you know, appropriate.
And so just do it.
For example, under the rate of Benedict XVI, we said wonderful things.
we could not have had the attitude as well. He's saying it. I don't have to.
Yeah. It might be the temptation. No, he's right. Yes, he said that, but I have to now say it to the groups of people over whom I have influenced. And that is my role as a Catholic. That's my apostol. Now, you're a confessor, and I'm sure you've heard tens of thousands or more confessions. What are the sorts of things that men, women are struggling with today? Is there over? Is there over?
overarching themes that that you're encountering that you think we need advice to help us with?
Well, the age category makes a difference.
I find young men are entrapped by the social media and the access it gives them to immoral images.
That's a quicksand for them, young men.
and almost invariably all of them will come trapped by that.
And unless I wrench them from that,
cut those chains, they'll have no peace and won't know where to go.
So that's what I encounter with them.
Other groups, a little bit older, I find do not know how to pray.
they think that prayer is this hysteria that Baptists are used to in their churches.
And I let them understand what I was in the gospel yesterday when you pray go into your room
and pray in secret, you have a heavenly father who sees and seek will hear you.
I put before them the publican and how his prayer was so perfect and lauded by our blessed sake.
because of its humility, even as the Pharisee was standing and waving his arms, and thank God, I am not like the rest of men.
All those histrionics, our Lord does not praise that.
And I think too many Catholics who have been in this time of famine, spiritual famine, think that maybe that's the way I'm going to get, because it makes me excited.
I had to try to correct them.
And then I think what moves the most is the perfect example of prayer is our lady.
And we look at her at the foot of the cross.
She was not wailing.
She was not in distress.
She was happy just to have her eyes meet the eyes of her son.
And the stirring of her immaculate heart was all invisible.
And yet it's perfect prayer.
I try to instruct Catholics of a certain age.
That's how they should pray.
And then, of course, of those, there is the very ordinary sins of trying to be a saint within their families
and dealing with the children of abandon the faith, which causes them great, great agony, as you know,
helping them to understand that.
Helping them to understand what Mother Church calls
rightly ordered prayer.
That order is so important.
And it hasn't been taught for a long time.
And unless prayer is ordered,
it's going to be inefficacious to us.
But Mother Church always taught us
the right ordered prayer through the traditional mass.
every part of it is bringing us to the Holy Trinity in a perfected way,
which doesn't give way to some mentality, doesn't give way to overt display,
in its profound restraint and yet almost delirious joy.
It teaches us everything we need to know about becoming, being Catholics,
and also how to pray.
and how to bring our Lord out to our neighbor.
And I did hear confessions for those 10 years I lived in St. Agnes,
and every stripe of sin was brought because of a commuter parish.
Confessions were hard all day long.
But it was so good to see people who were willing to be so contrite
and coming to confession.
a funny story for you.
The confession will never end
and say, I guess so when it was my turn
or the priest turned to come in either way half-hour periods,
we're knocking the confessional door.
And the priest would come out,
give the purple stole to the next priest.
And my dearly beloved friend
now gone to God and see Eugene Clark.
One day I was a pastor,
I was relieving him and I knocked down the door.
And he came out and gave me the purple stole
and he whispered in my ear,
Father, I've taken him.
and carry of all the unusual cases.
Okay.
Everyone's what unusual cases,
especially in the Tamanan.
Yeah.
Another thing that we were told during the crazy,
craziness was that the devil didn't exist,
and demons are just whatever, imaginary or,
or they're, you know,
they're kind of literary devices that personify evils,
but they're not themselves existent.
What should Catholics know about the demonic?
That's an interesting question, because first of all, they have to understand that it is a defined dogma of the Catholic faith that only angels exist, but some of them are fallen angels, devils, and their whole role is to deceive us and to bring us to hell.
Soutly, though, subtly.
And so a Catholic is defying the faith that they don't believe in them, and so they're not really psychological constructs or syndrome.
or literary devices.
That's all the nonsense of modernists
and atheists, especially atheist psychiatrists.
So we have to understand that.
Catholics have to have a balanced understanding
of the diabolical.
Yes.
And what I am troubled by these days, Matt,
is an imbalance.
So we have many Catholics today
who have become hysterical
over the diabolical,
thinking that somehow
the devil's around every corner,
corner. They do things like talk about generational sin, even though our Lord condemned it. And they
have a fascination with exorcisms. Yeah, there's a lot of this online. Oh, man, this is very
dangerous. Before the council, every archdiocese had their own exorcist. That would be a priest
elected by the bishop who was able to exercise the power he had given an ordination, as all of us have, of
exorcisms. However, the church understood that the greatest quality of an exorcist was humility,
only because the devil worked on pride. And so therefore, it was forbidden for him to identify himself
to anyone. So no one ever knew who the exorcist was in the diocese, and he would never divulge himself.
Because the moment he did that, he recognized he'd be giving his pride, like, I am the exorcist for the bishop.
So sanctification was all important.
Now suddenly we have a cottage industry
of priests who are boasting about being exorcists.
This is very unhealthy
because it's going to have Catholics,
especially Catholics who are well-meaning
in trying to escape the crisis,
beginning to think that, oh my goodness,
but the devil be there in everything I do?
Is he waiting for me here?
Is he waiting for me here?
Is it waiting to be there?
is the sin of my father going to become to me?
This was never spoken up before the council.
There was a balance, and that balance is given to us in the prayer of the priest in the office of Complain Matt.
When Mother Church gives to the priest the beautiful text from St. Peter's epistle, the first epistle of St. Peter, when he says, be watchful, be vigilant for your enemy, the devil goes about.
the world seeking souls to devour, stay said fast in the faith.
That simply meant that a Catholic was to remember that most of the sins, the temptations of sin,
that are going to come to me in the course of the day are going to be these subtle whispers by the devil.
And God has given me grace and free will to say no to those.
Now the devil will continue to try
And his manipulations are ever so clever
He's an angel after all
But that's all they are
And I have power over him
When I'm in the state of sanctifying grace
And if I'm staying close to the mother of God
She crushes him
Beneath her immaculate heel
And if I'm bleeding against her throughout the day
In many ways
She's going to protect me from him
he's going to flee.
So on the one hand, I recognize that he's there to ensnare me throughout the day.
I don't worry about it.
Yes.
And I think any exorcist worth his salt would agree with you.
Yes.
Does you think?
It's hard to find that balance, isn't it?
Because you've got some people who are listening.
You say the devil doesn't exist.
So then when they hear an exorcist like Father Rippager or somebody lay out, well, look, here's the reality.
It's beneficial to them.
And then you perhaps have people who've, you know, out of a soul.
sort of unhealthy fascination, listen to too much of that stuff.
And then, as you say, they need to calm down.
Yes, I fight a lot of that.
So that's what, the people you're interacting with,
you're saying it's more that than the other,
at least in Catholic circles.
Yes, the ones I interact with no longer have,
I'm not going to spout off the nonsense,
but there's no devil.
That's the exact opposite.
I'm afraid the devil's everywhere, Father.
And they're thinking too much about the exorcists.
And I admire Father Rippica so much.
I just think that emphasis of his might not be the best emphasis we need today.
Because it will somehow detract from a Catholic's joy.
As I'm fighting the devil, again, I have to be joyful because I am armed with grace.
I have the intercession of the mother of God and my guardian angel.
So no matter how vicious these temptations are,
I conquer them.
And I laugh at them.
The saints laughed at the devil, and he doesn't want to be left at.
He wants to be taking deadly serious.
And when he's laughed at, it is injures his pride, and he is wall-to-war pride.
This is not good.
So I just think that Catholics had to have this attitude of St. Peter and his epistle.
Yes, be vigilant.
Yes, be watchful.
because he is prowling around the old, seeking souls,
but if you're steadfast of the faith
and using those resources
and those implements I just talked about,
there's nothing to worry about.
He's conquered and he's not going to be a problem.
I guess you and I both think of that wonderful,
was it book six in the confessions,
where St. Augustine is trying to move out of his lusts.
finding it so awfully so powerfully portrayed and finding it so difficult you remember that one portion
where he's almost capturing purity will you leave us forever will you leave us behind oh my god wow
these voices that were to transit and he continued to fight against those whispers to the end of his life matt
we know that he asked his secretary every night to time
his hands to the bed panel behind him.
What?
I didn't know about that.
Out of humility.
No one must ever think that we ever impervious to those things.
Because he knows how effective they are, especially for men.
Because he has permission to deal with the imagination, remember.
Francis DeSales, I think it was, who said,
we should have patience with the whole world,
but primary have patience with oneself.
Does he say never become discouraged at seeing your imperfections, but every day begin the task anew?
It's good to hear that from a titan, like St. Francis de Sales.
So you don't mistake it for soft advice.
I mean, it's so important.
So as we kind of come to a close here, maybe some final advice for the Catholic who wants to become a saint, maybe is struggling, maybe is tempted to give up, maybe needs patience with themselves, but also needs to be encouraged to chase after virtue.
May I suggest to the audience that you find a good father confessor, because that's going to be critically important.
Someone to whom you're accountable every month, who comes to know your soul and recognizes when you're trying to dodge the will of God and when you're not, and can call you to account.
That's all important.
We cannot do this on ourselves.
St. Joseph Bavala said a man who is a judge in his own case is a fool.
Very important.
After you find that rear praise, it could be a father confessor.
for you. Then you begin the serious business, but the joyful business of taking one small step at a time
and doing the holy will of God. And knowing that, if you did that today, by the end of the day,
when you make your examination of conscience and you're going through the day and you look at those
victories that grace allowed you to win and you say, I'm one step closer to being a saint,
tomorrow there's a lot more work to be done. And if I should happen to fall, you. And if I should happen to
fall tomorrow, I will say to Christ crucified, I'll pick myself up, and now I begin again. I'll
say the act of contrition and move forward. We have to do that, and that ordered piety, St. Francis
to sales is a perfect example of that man. Ordered piety, nothing to excess and filled with joy,
and yet very, very wise counsels in the introduction to the about love.
Such a great book.
Come on.
Is that, and then maybe a more contemporary author,
Father Basil Maturon.
Okay.
Virtual guidelines for soul-seeking God.
Thank you.
I haven't heard of it.
Magnific, M-A-T-U-R-I-N.
Another one of his masterpieces,
almost like you'd find it in the New Age section of a bookstore.
He simply named it self-knowledge and self-discipline.
Matt, read it.
It will cause explosions.
in your soul.
Wow.
And in your intellect.
Go to Father Edward Lean, L-E-E-N.
These are all men who wrote in the beginning of the 20th century.
Their treatises on how to become a saint were remarkable.
For Lent, why the cross, the vine and the branches.
What is education?
Divine intimacy.
Divine intimacy of Father Capable of Mary Magdalene.
Another one I can go.
on on,
on,
Robert,
Robert Benson,
Manziah,
who brought so many
into the church.
We talk about
the devil.
C.S. Louis.
Screw tape letters.
Hilarious.
And yet,
and yet a Catholic
is getting understanding.
How does he operate?
But he operates
with subtlety.
He never shows his hand.
Yeah.
Spiritual reading is so important
for good Catholics.
They should be doing
at least 15 minutes
of it a day.
And this way they'll go forward, becoming saints.
I forget which saints said it,
but it was something to the effect of,
there are many devotions within the church's treasury,
choose only a few and remain faithful to them.
I like that advice because we have the temptation
to vacillate.
Over to it.
But I think something similar with spiritual reading.
We can look at all of the books
and feel guilty that we haven't read all of them
and then buy them all and then never read any of them.
Right.
What good would that do?
Choose one, consistency.
Like you said, nothing to excess.
just calm down 15 minutes a day.
15 minutes a day.
Father Magdal,
Father Gabriel of St. Mary Magdal is wonderful for mental prayer.
Yes, I would encourage Catholics.
This is very, very difficult.
What is mental prayer Catholics might be afraid of that priests I know are?
When Mother Church works about mental prayer,
she simply means that we're talking to our Lord
in the intimacy of our own words.
What could be easier?
I mean, Mother Church canonizes children as saying,
Stambasco, Agatha, Agnes.
They were all practicing this.
They spoke to our Lord from the bottom of their hearts.
Try to do that every day, 50 minutes.
In the beginning, I give spiritual direction to men.
They find it so hard.
Yeah.
But work at it and work at it.
And this is going to bring you, this is the speed ramp to becoming a sight.
You can't overlook mental prayer because it's,
It's easy for us to hide behind the beautiful prayers
that Mother's Jesus has given us.
But when we come to our Lord a mental prayer, Matt,
it's just me and him, in my own words,
making acts of adoration, contrition,
Thanksgiving, supplication.
And what he does in return is send us the Holy Spirit,
and he transforms us in ways that are imperceptible
at the beginning,
but nonetheless, bringing us close to His Sacred Heart,
therefore making us, if I may say it, tortures against the abyss.
Come on.
And now we're back to where we started.
No, truly apostles, you know, the Francis Xavier's.
That's what she needs now, these laymen to be Francis Xavier and Isaac Jogues and Vincent de Paul.
Lovely.
Thank you so much for taking the time.
You're very welcome.
It was a complete joy.
I hope I didn't bore your audience with those details of my.
my personal life. No, I think people find that fascinating. It's nice to know you're human and where
you came from. I find that very fascinating. So Torchers Against the Abyss, rather, we'll put the link
below for that and anything else you want to point people towards. I know you hold retreats.
I do hold retreats and they can find out about them. One of my assistants, Frank, told me,
I forget the name of my website. It's father pericot. We'll put it in there. We'll find it. Okay.
It is. He'll know it. And they can learn about the retreats you have.
My sermons are now on.
Yes.
They're excellent.
I watch them.
They're great.
They're small.
They're not, you know, it's like the articles, right?
Yeah.
And whoever's putting them together is doing a great job with your thumbnails and.
Yes, yes.
That's all Frank Minnishak and his great technological abilities.
Thank you, Frank.
Yes.
You know how I'm telling you.
Thank you, Father.
Thank you, Matt, so much.
You are joy to be with.
